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Tuesday, 29 January 2013

Daniel Kerr: Scotland's youngest showbiz sensation

Daniel Kerr: I was The Wee Man... now I’m the big man starring with Angelina

Talented schoolboy Daniel Kerr is fast becoming Scotland’s youngest showbiz
sensation.
The 12-year-old, from Bearsden, Glasgow, is currently starring as a young Paul
Ferris in the ex-hood’s movie biopic The Wee Man.
Last Friday, nearly four million telly viewers saw him appear alongside Royle
Family actor Ricky Tomlinson in new comedy-drama Great Night Out.
And the icing on the cake for the youngster is a dream role in Disney’s
animated blockbuster Maleficent, which is out next year and stars Angelina
Jolie and Peter Capaldi.

Daniel has had a part in Waterloo Road too but the biggest role of his career
is undoubtedly playing former gangster Ferris in the controversial film
about his life.
It’s become a box-office smash in Scotland and has taken more cash per
screenings across the UK than Quentin Tarantino’s Django Unchained and
Disney hit Monsters Inc 3D. Daniel — accompanied by contracts manager Iain
and hairdresser Annemarie — met with the 49-year-old convicted gun runner at
a Glasgow hotel to discuss the role before filming started.
He says: “I was really quite thrilled talking to a former Glasgow gangster
just drinking a wee bottle of Coke!
“But I was quite nervous and quite excited too. I kept thinking about what I
was going to say. I just wanted to be polite and friendly.”
Iain, 36, adds: “Daniel knows about Paul, his past and where he came from —
the good bits and the bad bits.
“He’s aware that he’s gone to jail and done a lot of things but to be honest,
when Paul met with us he was brilliant. He insisted on speaking to Daniel
and he was straight with him and told him he’d done some bad things in his
day.
“Paul warned Daniel that people might speak about them and challenge him about
them.
“My impression of him? I wouldn’t want to cross him.
“But he’s been brilliant with Daniel and a gentleman to me and my wife.
“He’s taken time out with Daniel to make sure he’s OK.
“He’ll still contact us every now and again, and he says to Daniel, ‘listen to
your mum and dad’.”
Iain initially feared the part could make his son a hate figure.
He says: “We had concerns about how the film would be perceived and how Daniel
would be perceived in the film because if you’re a baddie in EastEnders,
you’re a baddie in real life.
“Some folk don’t like you. And I didn’t want anything like that for Daniel.”

Meeting ... Daniel Kerr with Paul Ferris

The Wee Man — which also stars Martin Compston and John Hannah — follows
Ferris’s life from a youngster in Glasgow’s tough Blackhill area to feared
enforcer working with ‘The Godfather’ Arthur Thompson.
It features graphic scalping, shooting and stabbing scenes. Daniel revealed he
is banned from watching the film because of his age and has had to
settle for a montage of his scenes.
He says: “My dad’s explained why I can’t see the movie.
“I’ve thought about trying to sneak in and watch it somewhere but it’s
probably better for me to play it safe!”
He’s well aware of the controversy surrounding The Wee Man and its subject,
and adds: “I know some people aren’t really going to like it and I’ll just
need to cope with that.
“Nobody from my school gives me any attention about what I do so it’s quite
good. I don’t really tell anybody.
“I like to keep my acting life to myself when I’m at school.
“I don’t like to broadcast what I do and I never really talk to my friends
about it either.
“When I go on set, that’s when I go into acting mode.
“But when that’s over I just do my homework, get told what to do and look
after my wee brother Cameron, who’s seven.”
The movie sees a young Ferris being bullied by a group of older boys that
include the cruel Banks brothers.
Daniel relates to his character’s ordeal, saying: “I’m one of the smallest
boys in my school.
“And at my old primary school I used to get a lot of hassle about that. I
didn’t react with violence though, I just ignored them.”
In one scene the thugs kick his dog like a football, and Daniel adds:
“The emotion of the dog scene I quite liked.
“I loved the dog too. I was always playing with it off set.
“I’d get my make-up done and then go and roll about on the grass with it and
the make-up girls would shout on me to stop!”
The most nerve-wracking moment during filming for Daniel was rehearsing
confrontational scenes with his character’s tormentors.
He says: “I was terrified even though I knew it wasn’t real.
“They were bigger boys and were up in my face. That was scary.”
Daniel’s already had his first experience of being recognised by fans.
He says: “I was in B&Q with my mum after Waterloo Road had been on
and all these people were looking at me. That was a wee bit strange but I
liked it. I’m quite glad about the attention.”
The acting prodigy, a first year pupil at Glasgow’s Bearsden Academy, joined a
local theatre group aged five.
His supportive parents have guided his career ever since. He now combines
school with regular auditions and his studies at the Glasgow-based UK
Theatre School, where he’s been going for four years.
Daniel says: “Ever since I can remember, I was saying to my mum and dad that I
wanted to be an actor when I grew up. It’s a really exciting time for me
right now. I got into the local drama group and then they said I was good
enough to go to a higher level so that’s how I ended up at the theatre
school.
“I didn’t get in the first time I tried but I got a place after trying out the
second time.
“When I first do an audition, I just feel like it’s a breeze.
“But then when it’s like a really important part, I have to get into the zone
and I get quite nervous.”
His first appearance on screen was in a Scottish Government advert and he
followed that up with a part in Waterloo Road last year, playing
poverty-stricken youngster Ewan Murray.
Daniel — who was an extra in Peter Mullan’s gritty film Neds — will also pop
up in BBC3 sci-fi series Being Human next month.
Iain adds: “Daniel might turn 16, get a girlfriend, do something else and walk
away from acting.
“Whatever he does, we’ll support him.
“Just now, he’s a normal boy going to school, doing things right, doing things
wrong and nagging his wee brother. I want him to grow up as a kid and not
lose his childhood.”

Kid could be next Kevin Bridges
Daniel's scenes in Disney’s fantasy blockbuster Maleficent are expected to open the film.

The reworking of the fairytale Sleeping Beauty was shot in London last summer
and is due out next year.

The local hit
In England and Wales, not many people have heard of new release The Wee Man, or indeed of the real-life Scottish gangster-turned-author on which it's based, Paul Ferris. Consequently, the picture is playing on just one screen south of the border (London's Piccadilly Apollo). In Scotland, where it's showing in 15 cinemas, it's a different story. Thanks to stonking takings especially in Glasgow, Paisley, Falkirk, Hamilton and Clydebank, the crime tale achieved over £103,000 in Scotland, enough for fifth place in the local market and a Scottish site average of £6,897. While Scotland typically accounts for around 8% of the UK and Ireland box office, in The Wee Man's case the country is so far delivering more than 99%. A further expansion is planned from Friday. Concentrating media spend in Scottish national and local press, on Glasgow underground and outdoors, and on Scottish TV, distributor Carnaby followed the gameplan of earlier Scotland-skewing hits such as NEDS (79% of box-office from the region) and The Angels' Share (72%). The Wee Man stars locally popular Greenock-born actor Martin Compston, who got his acting break as a teenager with Ken Loach's Sweet Sixteen.

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